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Adaptations to Bone, Muscle, and Connective Tissue Chapter 4
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Page 1: Adaptations to Bone, Muscle, and Connective Tissue Chapter 4.

Adaptations to Bone, Muscle, and Connective Tissue

Chapter 4

Page 2: Adaptations to Bone, Muscle, and Connective Tissue Chapter 4.

Objectives

Describe the anatomy of bone, muscle, tendon and ligaments

Discuss the response of the tissues above to training

Design a program to stimulate growth of the above tissues

Page 3: Adaptations to Bone, Muscle, and Connective Tissue Chapter 4.

Bone ModelingWolff’s Law- bone responds by

adapting to applied stress– Osteoblasts (formation of bone)

– Osteoclasts (removal of bone)

– Collagen matrix

– Periosteum (outer covering)

– Trabecular bone (spongy)

– Cortical bone (solid)

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SkeletonAxial skeleton- skull, spinal

columnAppendicular skeleton-

upper extremity, shoulder girdle, lower extremity, pelvic girdle

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Bone HypertrophyMinimal essential strain- the

threshold stimulus for the formation of new bone

Activities must be weight-bearing to stimulate increases in bone density

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Bone Atrophy Bone atrophy occurs with

– Bed rest– Prolonged inactivity– Space travel– Osteoporosis

• Menopause related• Age related• Female athletic triad (disordered eating,

amenorrhea and osteoporosis. A female athlete can have one, two, or all three parts of the triad.

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Designing training programs to elicit osteogenic stimuliSpecificity of loading- perform

exercises that stress the part of the skeleton where increases in bone density are desired– Axial loading

Exercise selection- force vectors through the spine and hip, multiple muscles, multi-joint, use greater absolute loads

Page 12: Adaptations to Bone, Muscle, and Connective Tissue Chapter 4.

Designing training programs to elicit osteogenic stimuli

Progressive overload- gradually increase the training loads

Training variation- vary the selection of exercises to vary the distribution of forces

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Mechanical Loading of the Musculoskeletal SystemMagnitude of the load

(intensity)Rate (speed) of loadingDirection of the forcesVolume of loading (sets x

repetitions)

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Activity and Bone Density Resistance exercise- few studies

have looked at bone mineral density with resistance training, results are variable, no studies focus on the rate and magnitude of loading

Aerobic exercise- high intensity repetitive activities such as rowing, stair climbing, and running have been moderately successful in demonstrating bone mineral density increases

Page 15: Adaptations to Bone, Muscle, and Connective Tissue Chapter 4.

Resistance Exercise Rx for Stimulating Bone Density Volume 3-6 sets, up to 10 repetitions Load- 1RM to 10RM range Rest- 1-4 minutes Variation- periodized Exercise selection- structural

exercises: squats, cleans, deadlifts, bench presses, shoulder presses

Page 16: Adaptations to Bone, Muscle, and Connective Tissue Chapter 4.

Muscular AdaptationSpecific to fiber type recruited

HypertrophyHyperplasia

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Training for Muscle StrengthHigh resistance, near

maximal muscle actions, few number of repetitions, complete recovery between sets, stimulate FT muscle fibers

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Connective Tissue AdaptationType I collagen is a protein that

is the major collagen fiber in bone, tendons, and ligaments

Fibroblasts, cells that synthesize new materials, synthesize procollagen

Procollagen consists of three strands of protein in a triple helix

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Microfibril- parallel arrangement of collagen filaments

Collagen “cross links” (covalent cross linking) to increase tensile strength

Collagen is in the extracellular space- outside the cell membrane

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Ligaments, Tendons, and FasciaLigaments- connect bone to boneTendons- connect muscle to boneFascia- fibrous covering of skeletal

muscleEndomycium, perimysium,

epimysium

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Cartilage Provide a smooth articulating surface

between two bones in a joint Act as a shock absorber Aid in attaching muscles to bone Limits translation

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Cartilage Chondrocytes- cells that produce

cartilage Hyaline cartilage (articular cartilage)

covers the ends of long bones Ground substance- gel-like

carbohydrate material in the type II collagen of cartilage

Fibrous cartilage- tough fibrous bundles of type I and type I collagen, intervertebral disks, menisci

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Tendons and Ligaments In aerobic exercise, collagen

metabolism increases to repair collagen damaged during exercise

In high intensity exercise, there is a net growth of connective tissue (ligaments and tendons) causing an increase in cross-sectional area and strength

Ligament/bone attachment is the weakest link in that system

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Changes in Tendon Increase in collagen fibril diameter A greater number of covalent cross-

links within a fibril of increased diameter

An increase in the number of collagen fibrils

An increase in the packing density of collagen fibrils

Enhanced ability to withstand greater tensile forces

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Effects of Physical Activity on Cartilage Cartilage gets its nutrient

supply from synovial fluid Joint movement (exercise)

increases the nutrient supply to cartilage

Immobilization of a joint causes death of chondrocytes and resorption of cartilage matrix

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Moderate aerobic exercise increases cartilage thickness

Severe aerobic exercise or anaerobic exercise does not appear to cause degenerative joint disease

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Next Class

Chapter 21 Aerobic